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French parliament adopts special law to avoid government shutdown

Europe

The French Senate on Wednesday approved a special law to ensure the continuation of core state functions while the government works on next year's budget. The law, passed after the lower house's approval, serves as a temporary measure while the deeply divided parliament tackles the 2025 budget.

French MPs attend a session to vote on the special budget draft law at the National Assembly in Paris on December 16, 2024.
French MPs attend a session to vote on the special budget draft law at the National Assembly in Paris on December 16, 2024. © Geoffroy van der Hasselt, AFP

The French Senate formally approved on Wednesday a special law designed to maintain core state functions and prevent any interruption of public services, following an earlier approval by the lower house of parliament last week.

The law is intended to act as a stopgap until France's deeply divided parliament passes next year's proper budget bill drafted by the new government. This budget bill is most likely due in early 2025.

The veteran centrist Francois Bayrou, named as Prime Minister last week after the sudden collapse of his predecessor Michel Barnier's government, needs to get the budget through parliament, with France under pressure to cut its deficit.

Lawmakers' pushback over the 2025 budget bill led to Barnier's downfall and left-wing leaders say they may try to topple Bayrou should he also use special constitutional powers to ram through the budget without a vote in parliament.

(Reuters)

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